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22 Entries
Donald Riker
March 11, 2024
I first met Jim Rising at the University of Kansas when he was a graduate student and I was a zoology major. My boyhood love of birds was made real by Jim as a mentor and field biologist. I was lucky to be invited on field trips led by Jim in Kansas and later in Ontario. My Ph.D. thesis at Cornell and Yale postdoc described sparrow brain neurochemistry and migratory behavior which eventually led to a career in medical research in neurology and the common cold and its virology. I look on Jim as one of the key mentors in my career development and will always miss his engaging leadership and quirky sense of humor.
Martha Pippitt
August 6, 2018
Trudy and family, we send our condolences. We recall our graduate school days at KU and our living in the house out on 15th where you and Jim had previously lived. We so much enjoyed all the bird houses. I also remember you and I being lab partners in Armitage's comparative animal physiology.
Jacqueline Miller
April 13, 2018
My deepest condolences on you loss. Jim was a great educator and natural historian. I fondly remember working alongside Jim in several Neotropical countries where he took students into the field to learn about biodiversity firsthand. Jim inspired many students, including myself as I journeyed through graduate study. He will be deeply missed.
Jocelyn Paas
April 5, 2018
Hi Trudy,
Sorry I missed signing my name to my previous message. I am thinking of you with love.
Jocelyn Paas (STAO)
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April 3, 2018
Dear Trudy, I am so sorry to hear of your loss. May the time you had together be a treasure to you. May the love of friends and family be a comfort.
Gerrie Storr
April 3, 2018
Trudy - it sounds as if you have lost someone truly special. May your memories endure and make your time without Jim a little less daunting. Gerrie Storr (STAO).
Brian Shuter
April 1, 2018
Jim was a great long-term neighbour to have on the 4rth floor of Ramsay Wright. We talked often of our traveling sons, events in the department and our respective research projects. When our field work overlapped (pretty rare for birds and fish to overlap but it happened occasionally) he was very generous with ideas and equipment AND we even ran across each other at the Shaw Festival a few times ... I will miss him.

A Savannah Sparrow of course!
Alvaro Jaramillo
March 26, 2018
I just posted this on facebook for friends: I spent the morning in a field full of Savannah Sparrows at the end of my street. Thinking about Jim Rising. See, Jim was the guy that knew more about Savannah Sparrow geographic variation than anyone on earth, and sadly I heard over the weekend that he passed away. Jim was also my thesis supervisor at University of Toronto, and the nicest of guys you could ever meet. As an undergraduate I would pop by his office to ask about some work that was due, and before you knew it we were talking about subspecies, and birds, and it was hours before we got out of there. I learned more in these sessions than in the classroom! On our way to Kansas in a VW van, to study oriole hybrid zones, I remember having a fun discussion with him about American Tree Sparrows, and how I thought they were Zonotrichias, and had nothing to do with Spizella. We got it all sorted out, in agreement, and now with DNA data it is cool to think back and realize we were right, it isn't a Spizella! Jim taught me a lot. From guiding me in measuring hundreds of Junco bones to figure out their shape and size variation over the continent, to guiding my work on Argentine cowbirds, and in between giving me the green light to head to West Africa to study endangered White-breasted Guineafowl. I was looking forward to sharing a beer and talking geographic variation, and Savannah Sparrows with him on this summer's visit to Canada, sadly instead I will just have to remember the good times. Thanks Jim for all you taught so many of us. For the birders out there - you may have Jim and David Beadle's books on sparrows. He was a scientist, but always a keen birder and naturalist, happy to see a lifer. On that very trip to Kansas I got to show him his (and my!) lifer Black Rail. He always got a kick of telling people about the unlikely probability of that ever having happened, particularly in his home state of Kansas, in the heat of the day, in the first random spot where I had the thought of trying. Jim deserved that Black Rail, he had put in his time and effort.
Margaret May
March 26, 2018
Trudy I am so sorry to learn that Jim died. I first met you and Jim at a WOS meeting in the late 70s and so enjoyed Jim whenever our paths converged -- mainly at bird meetings I think when the KU crowd got together! Jon very much valued his long friendship and shared interests with Jim, even if Jim was the better ping pong player! I am grateful to have been part of some of those good times. warm regards.
March 24, 2018
A valued friend. We shared many times at La Perouse Bay Manitoba where we taught a field course together
Fred Cooke, Norfolk UK
John Newman
March 23, 2018
knew Jim as a grad student at KU in the 1960's. If I am not mistaken, he was responsible for the 'Northern Oriole' to regain its name as "Baltimore Oriole."
Anthony Lang
March 23, 2018
While I was a grad student at U of T, my office was across the hallway from his in the zoology building, and I was his teaching assistant for his field ornithology course twice. He was an infectiously enthusiastic teacher, a fine scientist, and genuinely good, generous human being. I always enjoyed my interactions with him, not least because of his great sense of humour. Trudy, his children, and grandchildren can be proud of his contributions.
Jay Sheppard
March 22, 2018
Jim was a great friend over many decades. I will miss his smiling face at future meetings of the AOS (AOU). His passing is a great loss to not only all of us who knew him but for future generations of biologists and esp. ornithologists.
Sandra LL Gaunt
March 22, 2018
I am so saddened. Jim and I were "student curators" of Ornithology at the Dyke Museum of Natural History of the University of Kansas in 1962-63. He was such fun and we kept in touch through Ornithology meetings over the years. We will miss him. Sandy G
Nikolai Tatarnic
March 21, 2018
While I was a student at UofT I had the good fortune to take several of Jim's classes. Evolution, Field Ornithology in NB, Field Ecology in Ecuador... Jim was an excellent scientist, a great mentor, and an incredibly nice man. I owe much to him. He will be missed.
Gillian and Ken Bartlett
March 19, 2018
Jim was the epitome of a scholar and a gentleman without any of the stuffiness that description might imply. Our hearts go out to Trudy and the family at this time.

Roz H
March 18, 2018
My fond memories of Jim go back over 40 years. In the 1970s our families had excursions together - to cross country ski, to walk and of course to identify plants and animals, especially birds. Later adventures included cottage visits (summer and winter), collecting local mushrooms and having enough confidence to enjoy them for breakfast! I remember Jim's love of classical music, jazz, and Mark Twain, his sense of humour, his passion for sharing science and educating students, and his amazing patience. He will be much missed.
Michael Biro
March 17, 2018
A noble, dedicated, precious addition to Canadian ornithology and education, Gentleman Jim will be missed.
Dave Broughton
March 17, 2018
I first met Jim as a student in his adult education ornithology course. He became a friend, mentor, bird-watching pal, and fellow Blue Jay fan. He helped get the Toronto Bird Observatory started by allowing us to band under the R.O.M. permit. We shared many great birding moments around Toronto, Point Pelee, and the Niagara River, had fun with dirty bird quizzes, and spent opening days at old Exhibition stadium. We kind of lost touch when I moved out of Toronto. I always held him in high regard he was the un-stuffiest professor I ever met! I will miss him.
Erica Nol
March 17, 2018
Such a delightful, fun and caring man. Your wit and insights will be missed at ornithological meetings Jim.

Barry MacKay
March 17, 2018
While my childhood ambition was to be an ornithologist, a teenage bout of encephalitis ended that idea, and yet Jim, recognizing my passion, invited me to attend informal meetings with well-known ornithologists held for his students in his home, a great kindness to me, fondly remembered at this sad time.
jim rogerson
March 17, 2018
I'll miss you, Jim. You were a very special man.
Showing 1 - 22 of 22 results

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